🌳 Tropical Forest Forever Facility: ASEAN and Brazil Reimagining Global Forest Finance
A landmark South-South initiative set to reshape climate funding ahead of COP30 in Belém, Brazil. 🌏💰

🪶 The Main Takeaway
Brazil and the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) co-hosted a regional workshop in Jakarta with ASEAN Member States to discuss the Tropical Forest Forever Facility (TFFF) — an ambitious financing mechanism designed to reward countries for protecting tropical forests.
The dialogue marks a major milestone ahead of the Facility’s official launch at COP30 in Belém, Brazil, on 6 November 2025.







🌏 Why It’s on Our Radar
Southeast Asia holds some of the world’s richest tropical rainforests — yet also faces some of the highest deforestation pressures globally.
Global data show that tropical primary forests lost about 6.7 million hectares in 2024 — nearly double the 2023 loss.
The TFFF offers ASEAN a path toward sustainable investment and climate resilience, aligned with regional carbon-neutral goals.
“The TFFF is closely aligned with ASEAN’s aspirations for sustainable and inclusive growth toward a carbon-neutral future,” said H.E. Henrique Ferraro, Ambassador of Brazil to ASEAN.
💡 What’s at Stake
💰 USD 125 billion fund proposed to generate roughly USD 4 billion per year for forest-rich countries.
🌿 USD 4 per hectare of eligible forest protected annually.
🇮🇩 Penalties up to 100–200× for each hectare lost.
🫱🏽🫲🏽 At least 20% of funds allocated to Indigenous Peoples and Local Communities (IPLCs).
🚫 No carbon credits — the mechanism focuses on performance-based grants rather than credit trading.
For Indonesia, the country could become a major beneficiary through verified forest protection — though the USD 4 billion per year remains a projection, not a guaranteed payout.
📸 The Big Picture
🌎 Led by Brazil, co-designed by Colombia, DRC, Ghana, Indonesia, and Malaysia, alongside sponsor countries: France, Germany, Norway, UAE, UK, and the United States.
🤝 Supported by ASEAN dialogue partners, civil society, Indigenous communities, and private-sector actors.
💬 André Aquino, Advisor on Economics at Brazil’s Ministry of Environment and Climate Change, described TFFF as a bold new initiative to value tropical forests that regulate climate and sustain biodiversity. The facility will also ensure continuous, large-scale funding for conservation, and also enabling long-term forest protection policies, including payments to local communities.
🌐 The Regional Stakes
ASEAN countries hold a significant share of the world’s tropical forests but face mounting pressures from legal land clearing and industrial expansion.
Brazil and UNDP emphasized that ASEAN’s participation is crucial to make the Facility equitable and globally representative.
“Supporting initiatives like the TFFF is crucial to ensure that tropical forests remain standing and continue contributing to global climate stability and biodiversity,” Ida Bagus Made Bimantara, Director for ASEAN External Cooperation, Indonesia’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
🏠 Why This Hits Home
The TFFF signals that Southeast Asia’s forests are global stabilizers, not just regional resources.
By joining the Facility, ASEAN nations could lead a Global South movement that ties conservation directly to long-term economic gain — and helps make the Paris Agreement goals more practical and inclusive.
✨ Beyond the Headlines
🌳 A Global South–driven initiative uniting Brazil, UNDP, and ASEAN in a shared forest finance framework.
🌏 Set for unveiling at COP30 in Belém, the TFFF will debut as the world’s first “perpetual forest endowment,” securing long-term climate funding for future generations.
🌿 Positions Southeast Asia as a key pillar of the Global South’s climate leadership and collective action.
Need More Angles?
Jakarta Globe Indonesia Vows to Invest in Brazil-Led $125 Billion Forestry Fund
Philstar Brazil and ASEAN: Together for a prosperous and peaceful future
Vietnam+ Brazil and ASEAN: Together for a prosperous and peaceful future
(VRG/BRZ/NGO/ARS)





